Legislative Update: April 25

Various Tea Party leaders allied in the Stateouse lobby Tuesday in favor of a school choice bill

–The House voted to pass a pair of bills that are part of the House GOP’s tax-cutting proposal. The bills would lower both personal and small business income taxes. Democratic leaders, although concerned about paying for the cuts, dropped their opposition to a measure that would collapse the state’s income tax brackets after getting assurances they would not take effect until next fiscal year.

–The Senate sent to the Governor legislation that would officially implement new regulations on commercial trucks in South Carolina. Lawmakers drafted the bill in response to 12-year-old federal regulations that state troopers started enforcing last year. Many lawmakers reluctantly supported the regulations, saying they created a burden on businesses.

–The Senate Judiciary Committee voted to advance a bill that would ban drivers from using their cell phones while in construction or school zones. It would also bar those under 18 from using a phone at all while behind the wheel, unless it is a hands-free device. The bill now heads to the Senate floor. A version that passed the House last month would have banned texting for all drivers, but senators said that alone would have never passed their chamber. Opponents question how texting is worse than other forms of distracted driving.

–The Senate Finance Committee took up next year’s budget Tuesday. As WSPA-TV reports, the biggest debate right now is over how big of a raise state employees should receive. The House budget included a two percent across-the-board raise, but some Democrats say the number should be larger after five years of salary freezes.

–The latest Winthrop poll released Tuesday shows that Gov. Nikki Haley’s approval rating and disapproval rating among South Carolinians was almost exactly the same. 37 percent of those polled say they approve of the governor’s work performance, while 36.5 percent disapprove. Nearly a quarter said they were unsure.